- Internet Archive – Feature Films - When you’re looking for free movies online.
- Google Video: For some time now, major classics have appeared on Google’s site. You will find many such films above.
- Australian Screen Archive: The Australian National Film and Sound Archive provides free and worldwide access to over 1,000 film and television titles – a treasure chest of down-under video 100 years in the making.
- B Minus Movies: AMC is your new go-to site for B-movies.
- Babelgum Films: Babelgum’s goal is to act as an international ‘glue’, bringing a huge range of professional and semi-professional films to a global audience – like a modern-day Tower of Babel.
- BestOnlineDocumentaries: As one reader previously told us, “This site is a bit out of date and some of the links are broken, but it’s still a great compilation of online documentaries.”
- Big Five Glories: Presents classic films in the public domain within an attractive user interface. Makes the films a pleasure to watch.
- Classic Cinema Online: This site nicely pulls together hundreds of classic films, ranging from Action to Westerns and even old cinema shorts and news reels.
- ClearBits: This new site provides hosting and distribution for open licensed (Creative Commons) media and datasets. They have a section devoted just to movies, and all their content can be downloaded without cost.
- Clicker: The Internet Television guide tells you where you can watch free and paid-for movies online.
- Crackle.com: If you’re looking for more mainstream movies, here you go. This is Sony’s online movie play. Note: there’s probably some geo-blocking that comes with this.
- Creative Commons: The folks who gave us the Creative Commons license host a wiki where you can find a good number of freely available films.
- Documentary Film Network: This site has been archiving documentaries for the past 4 years and serving them free of charge.
- Europa Film Treasures: Thanks to Europa Film Treasures, you can spend hours looking back through an archive of European film. Theses films range from “comedy to science fiction, from westerns to animation, from erotic to ethnological movies.” Highly recommended by our readers.
- Film Annex: This site has one of the largest selections of online films for you to watch or download. You’ll also find at the Film Annex many films from independent filmmakers and directors. The site gives you the ability to download or stream films to your PC, laptop or iPhone. The films are ad-supported.
- FMO: FreeMoviesOnline features a large selection of public domain films.
- Hulu: Unfortunately Hulu limits its programming to a US audience (a policy that really needs to change), but it’s the 800 pound gorilla in the US, and there are some decent films here. You will find some Hulu titles sprinkled in above.
- IMDB: This is perhaps a little redundant, but the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) also hosts some free online films (as well as TV shows) on its site. From what I can tell, it’s done in partnership with Hulu. But this collection has the advantage of pointing you to some decent films.
- NFB.ca: NFB.ca is a web site where you can watch films produced by the National Film Board of Canada. It offers access to 100s of documentaries, animated films and trailers.
- Open Flix: This YouTube channel features hundreds of full length films. And they’re all apparently free and legal. A very nice resource.
- OVGuide: If you’re looking for more free films, you should pay this site a visit. OVGuide is an up-to-date guide to online video, including TV shows, movies, and video games. It offers another way to find free movies online.
- PBS Video: PBS productions are also housed here.
- QuickSilverScreen: This site essentially puts torrents online and lets you watch films posted by other users, including many new films. It’s hard to believe that this site is entirely kosher, but it’s very popular (one of the top 3,000 sites on the web) and hardly a closely held secret.
- Sling.com: This collection contains some dreck, but also some decent documentaries and classic films. So it gets on the list.
- SnagFilms: SnagFilms “finds the world’s most compelling documentaries, whether from established heavyweights or first-time filmmakers, and makes them available to a wide audience.” You can watch full-length documentary films for free. Currently includes over 550 films.
- Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive: This online catalog “provides access to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Steven Spielberg Film and Video Archive. The Archive serves as a comprehensive informational and archival resource worldwide for moving image materials pertaining to the Holocaust and related aspects of World War II.”
- The Auteurs.com: Though this site typically offers arts films on a pay-per-view basis, it does feature a series of free films. Each month, a free film is featured. The site also hosts free international films restored by Martin Scorsese’s Word Cinema Foundation, mentioned below.
- UbuWeb: Presents dozens of avant-garde films & videos for your viewing pleasure.
- Veoh.com: Tends to redistribute films from Hulu but some other gems one can be found here.
- Video on Demand at Buy DVD.com: Ok, it’s not the most enriching collection of films. But if you’re looking for something light…
- Wikipedia List of Public Domain Films: A great resource for finding films in the public domain
- World Cinema Foundation: The WCF, created by Martin Scorsese in 2007, has restored a series of classic international films. You can watch them for free online.
- YouTube Movies: YouTube hosts a series of full-length movies (that are likely geo-restricted).
- YouTube Screening Room: The Screening Room presents high quality, short independent films to YouTube users and promises to roll out four new films every two weeks. The collection includes some Academy-Award winners and other quality films.




